Son: John Ephraim BarnettParents: Ephraim and Jane BarnettUncle: George H. Barnett, Sr. (Jr. and Sr. were used to distinguish between uncles
and nephews as well as fathers and sons.)Brother: Robert Harvey BarnettBrother: Paul John and Catherine Barnettwith their children Henry Logan and Francis HellenBrother: Elijah McClenahan and Eleanor Barnettwith their children Elijah Benjamin and David WesleyAunt: Adalade Martz, sister of Barbara Barnett

George and Barbara are
buried in the IOOF Cemetery
in The Dalles, Oregon

George Barnett's father Ephraim was a farmer-preacher who came over the Oregon Trail when he was 56 years of age. George's mother Jane was 58. This was a demanding trip for these senior citizens. The family group settled near Lebanon, Oregon at a community that became known as Sand Ridge.

Among the first projects at Sand Ridge was to establish a church. Most of the relatives had settled in this area so a church group was natural. They met in the home of Ephraim and Jane Barnett, but the organizational work was done by John Alkire Powell from the Albany area. This was 1855.

Ephraim and Jane finished their years at Sand Ridge and are burried in the Sand Ridge Cemetery.

George did some farm work and maybe some gold mining. By the fall of 1858, he was teaching school in the Lebanon area. It may have been the Sand Ridge School.

George Hays Barnett was next involved in teaching at the grade-school level in Monmouth. It was called the Monmouth Academy, a school of the lower grades.

It was here that Monmouth University had been established in 1856 with Judge J. W. Cowls as the teacher. In 1865 Levi Lindsay Rowland was selected as the first president and the University became simply Christian College.

This pioneer teacher-preacher did not feel well enough to teach every year and took at least a year away from that work. He began to dream about moving to Eastern Oregon where the climate is drier than the Willamette Valley. He spoke about this plan among his friends.

George then taught for two years at Bethany, near Silverton. Following this, he went to Bethel, located about four miles south of Amity, Oregon.

According to Bethel historian John E. Smith, George Hays Barnett was the principal of Bethel Academy (grades and high school) during the 1866-1867 school year.

About 1871, Levi Lindsay Rowland sold his Eastern Oregon ranch located east of The Dalles to G. H. Barnett. George moved his family to this ranch at Dufur (once known as Fifteenmile because it was located on Fifteenmile Creek). It was while living here that son John Ephraim was married to Martha Ann Turner. John also taught school and was the first postmaster at Boyd, three miles away.

Historian Jerry Rushford says of G. H. Barnett and his lady, "They were living in Wasco County in the 1870's and 1880's. He was preaching for the Fifteen Mile Church in that county when the P. P. Underwood family arrived in 1878. Underwood shared the preaching responsibilities with Barnett."

In 1890, John Ephraim Barnett moved his family to The Dalles and the following year George Hays and Barbara Ellen Barnett followed, settling in a house at 325 East 11th Street.

George worked with John W. Jenkins to establish, first a Sunday School, then a church at Court and Ninth Street.